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An epilepsy-associated K V 1.2 charge-transfer-center mutation impairs K V 1.2 and K V 1.4 trafficking.

Authors :
Nilsson M
Lindström SH
Kaneko M
Wang K
Minguez-Viñas T
Angelini M
Steccanella F
Holder D
Ottolia M
Olcese R
Pantazis A
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America [Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A] 2022 Apr 26; Vol. 119 (17), pp. e2113675119. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Apr 19.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We report on a heterozygous KCNA2 variant in a child with epilepsy. KCNA2 encodes KV1.2 subunits, which form homotetrameric potassium channels and participate in heterotetrameric channel complexes with other KV1-family subunits, regulating neuronal excitability. The mutation causes substitution F233S at the KV1.2 charge transfer center of the voltage-sensing domain. Immunocytochemical trafficking assays showed that KV1.2(F233S) subunits are trafficking deficient and reduce the surface expression of wild-type KV1.2 and KV1.4: a dominant-negative phenotype extending beyond KCNA2, likely profoundly perturbing electrical signaling. Yet some KV1.2(F233S) trafficking was rescued by wild-type KV1.2 and KV1.4 subunits, likely in permissible heterotetrameric stoichiometries: electrophysiological studies utilizing applied transcriptomics and concatemer constructs support that up to one or two KV1.2(F233S) subunits can participate in trafficking-capable heterotetramers with wild-type KV1.2 or KV1.4, respectively, and that both early and late events along the biosynthesis and secretion pathway impair trafficking. These studies suggested that F233S causes a depolarizing shift of ∼48 mV on KV1.2 voltage dependence. Optical tracking of the KV1.2(F233S) voltage-sensing domain (rescued by wild-type KV1.2 or KV1.4) revealed that it operates with modestly perturbed voltage dependence and retains pore coupling, evidenced by off-charge immobilization. The equivalent mutation in the Shaker K+ channel (F290S) was reported to modestly affect trafficking and strongly affect function: an ∼80-mV depolarizing shift, disrupted voltage sensor activation and pore coupling. Our work exposes the multigenic, molecular etiology of a variant associated with epilepsy and reveals that charge-transfer-center disruption has different effects in KV1.2 and Shaker, the archetypes for potassium channel structure and function.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1091-6490
Volume :
119
Issue :
17
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35439054
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2113675119